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Is Joe Burrow still having fun playing football? That’s a question the Cincinnati Bengals quarterback is still trying to figure out.

In a Dec. 10 press conference, one reporter asked Burrow if the turf toe injury that kept the quarterback sidelined for 10 weeks had affected ‘the way [he] views the game.’ After saying the injury didn’t affect how he felt about winning, Burrow became more reflective about the bigger picture.

‘If I want to keep doing this, I have to have fun doing it,’ said Burrow. ‘I have been through a lot. If it’s not fun, then what am I doing it for?’

One reporter asked a follow-up question on whether it’s been difficult for Burrow to have fun this season with his injury and the Bengals’ poor record.

Burrow said, ‘Yeah, certainly.’

Another reporter asked when playing football started to feel less fun for Burrow. The Bengals quarterback said there wasn’t a specific changing point, but that he’s been reflecting in recent days and weeks.

‘It’s just reflection on a lot of things that I’ve done and been through in my career,’ Burrow said. ‘I think I’ve been through more than most, and it’s certainly not easy on the brain or body.

‘(I’m) just trying to have fun doing it again.’

Moments later, someone else told Burrow he seemed especially reflective and asked if he had something specific on his mind.

‘There’s just a lot of things going on right now,’ Burrow said.

‘Football related? Personally?’ the reporter asked.

‘All of the above,’ Burrow said.

Joe Burrow injury history: Full injury timeline for Bengals QB

  • Aug. 22, 2017: Burrow, a backup quarterback at Ohio State, undergoes surgery after breaking a bone in his throwing hand during practice. The surgery knocks him out of a competition with Dwayne Haskins Jr. for the QB2 spot.
  • Jan. 13, 2020: Burrow, the starting quarterback for LSU, tears his rib cartilage in the first half of the 2020 CFP National Championship against Clemson. He remains in the game and wins the national title.
  • Nov. 22, 2020: In Week 11 of Burrow’s rookie season with the Bengals, he takes a low hit while throwing his pass. He tears his ACL and MCL and suffers additional damage to his PCL and meniscus in his left knee.
  • Dec. 5, 2021: Burrow dislocates his pinky finger on his throwing hand while taking a sack on the first series of the game. He remains in the game, throwing for 300 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions.
  • Jan. 2, 2022: Burrow aggravates previous knee injury on one of the final plays in a game against the Chiefs. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reports that Burrow told head coach Zac Taylor he could have gone back in.
  • Feb. 13, 2022: Burrow sprains his MCL while taking a sack in the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl. The injury requires rehab, but Burrow avoids surgery.
  • July 27, 2023: Burrow strains his calf during a training camp practice and is carted off the field. He returns in time for the regular season.
  • Nov. 16, 2023: Burrow tears a ligament in his wrist in the first half of a Week 11 game against the Ravens. He misses the rest of the season.
  • Sept. 14, 2025: Burrow sustains a turf toe injury in a Week 2 game against the Jaguars while taking a sack in the second quarter. The Bengals declare him out for the game, and Burrow gets surgery to repair the ligaments in his foot. He missed 10 weeks with the injury before returning on Thanksgiving.
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Former Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore has been arrested and booked into Washtenaw County Jail in Michigan on Wednesday, Dec. 10.

Prior reports noted he had been detained by police, though no reason for his detainment was given.

It’s the latest development in a day that had already seen Moore fired from his position as the Wolverines’ coach after the university found ‘credible evidence’ he ‘engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a staff member.’

Here are the latest updates surrounding Moore:

Sherrone Moore updates, news

All times Eastern

Sherrone Moore arrested, booked in Washtenaw County Jail

According to online court records, Moore was booked into Washtenaw County Jail at 8:30 p.m. He remained in custody as of 10:30 p.m., though no charges or booking information was immediately available.

According to a statement from Pittsfield Township Police, police responded to a location at 4:10 p.m. ‘for the purposes of investigating an alleged assault.’ The statement went on to read that the suspect in the incident was taken into custody, but did not name the individual.

Per Pittsfield Township Police, the incident ‘does not appear to be random in nature,’ and an ‘investigation is ongoing.’

Sherrone Moore detained, per reports

Shortly after 7 p.m., reports surfaced that Moore had been detained in Saline, Michigan, less than 10 miles south of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Reports indicated the Saline Police Department ‘assisted in locating and detaining’ Moore before transferring him to Pittsfield Township Police.

No reason was given for his detainment, nor did Moore show up in arrest or jail records.

Sherrone Moore fired for cause from Michigan

At 4:43 p.m. ET, Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel issued a statement confirming reports the Wolverines had fired Sherrone Moore ‘for cause.’

‘U-M head football coach Sherrone Moore has been terminated, with cause, effective immediately. Following a University investigation, credible evidence was found that Coach Moore engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a staff member. This conduct constitutes a clear violation of University policy, and U-M maintains zero tolerance for such behavior.

‘Biff Poggi has been appointed head football coach in an interim capacity, effective immediately.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

This is a sting the Canadians are going to be feeling until February. 

The U.S. women clinched this year’s Rivalry Series in resounding fashion Wednesday night, tagging their archrivals for a record 10 goals. It’s the most goals Canada has ever allowed in international play, topping the nine they gave up to the U.S. at the 2012 world championships. The U.S. women have now outscored Canada by a whopping 20-6 through the first three games in this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

The fourth and final game is Saturday night. 

The U.S. and Canada dominate the women’s game, playing each other for gold in all but one Olympics and one world championships. And Canada has traditionally gotten the better of the Americans, winning five of the seven Olympic gold medals and 13 of the 24 world titles. 

But the momentum seems to have shifted the U.S. women’s way. 

The Americans have won two of the last three world championships, including an overtime thriller in the spring, and have thoroughly dominated Canada in the first three games of this rivalry series. They look faster, scrappier and deeper, with 12 different players scoring in the first three games. 

And Canada as powerless to do anything about it. The Canadians even brought back their stalwart goalkeeper, Ann-Renee Desbiens, for Game 3 after being outscored 10-2 in the first two games. She was gone midway through the second period.  

Now, this doesn’t mean the Americans are going to win the gold medal at the Milano Cortina Olympics. But coach John Wroblewski has to look how his team is looking while Canada needs to look for some answers. 

Final score: USA 10, Canada 4

Canada might have had the momentum entering the third period, but the USA scored four consecutive goals for the win. Kelly Panek and Abbey Murphy each scored their second goal of the game to complete the rout. The USA is now 3-0 in the Rivalry Series, outscoring Canada 20-6.

The fourth and final game of the Rivalry Series is Saturday (9 p.m. ET) in Edmonton.

Abbey Murphy scores USA’s 10th goal

Abbey Murphy is on her way to another hat trick. 

Murphy, who had three goals in the first game of this Rivalry Series, got her second goal of the night 11:12 into the third period to push the U.S. lead to 10-4. Murphy also scored in the first period. Her five goals (so far) lead all scorers in this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

USA rout is on

The U.S. power play has been a killer. 

Natalie Spooner was whistled for hooking 5:49 into the first period. With 15 seconds left in the power play, Kirsten Simms scored, giving the Americans a 9-4 lead. 

USA’s Kelly Panek scores again

That’s two goals tonight for Kelly Panek. And two assists for Hilary Knight. 

Panek padded the U.S. lead 3:53 into the third period, her goal making it 8-4. Panek was assisted on the goal by Knight, who also had an assist on Alex Carpenter’s goal about three minutes earlier. 

Alex Carpenter adds to USA lead

Alex Carpenter put a stop to Canada’s rally. 

Carpenter scored 1:13 into the third period, extending the U.S. lead to 7-4. Her goal comes after Canada had scored three goals over the final 13:01 of the second period, including two in the final 90 seconds. 

Carpenter is the seventh U.S. player to score in Game 3 of this edition of the Rivalry Series. The U.S. women have gotten goals from 11 different players, so far, in the three games. 

Third period underway

USA leads 6-4 but is short-handed to start the period because of the unsuccessful challenge on the Sophie Jaques goal. Jaques hits the post in the final second of the power play.

End of second: USA 6, Canada 4

Anyone who thought Canada was going to go down without a fight hasn’t experienced the Rivalry Series before. 

Canada scored three goals in the second period, including two in a 54-second span, to cut the U.S. lead to 6-4 going into the final period. 

‘The Canada-USA rivalry is insane,’ Abbey Murphy said of the frenzy of goals. 

The Americans dominated their archrivals in the first two games, and this looked like more of the same early. After Sarah Fillier scored 48 seconds into the first period, the Americans scored five unanswered goal. Sophie Jaques finally ended the U.S. run, scoring 13:01 into the second period. Kelly Panek extended the U.S. lead again, to 6-3, before Julia Gosling and Jaques kept the game from getting out of hand. 

Gosling scored a power-play goal 18:43 into the period, and Jaques followed with her second goal of the night 19:47 into the period. 

Despite trailing, Canada has outshot the Americans 30-21. 

Canada scores two quick goals

We’ve got ourselves a game again.

Julia Gosling and Sophie Jaques scored in a 54-second span to cut the U.S. lead to 6-4 as the second period is winding down. Gosling scored first, on a power play 18:43 into the second period. Jaques followed 19:43 into the period. It was her second goal of the game.

Officials took an extended look at Jacques goal after the Americans challenged, arguing that Jaques had made contact with U.S. goalkeeper Gwyneth Philips. But officials decided Jaques was outside the crease when the contact occurred, and a loud cheer went up when the goal was confirmed. The USA goes short-handed because of the lost challenge.

Kelly Panek adds to USA lead

The U.S. women better hope they’re not using up all their goals before the Olympics. 

Kelly Panek is the latest American to get on the score sheet, scoring 16:24 into the second period to give the U.S. a 6-2 lead. She’s the sixth U.S. woman with a goal in Game 3, following Tessa Janecke, Abbey Murphy, Jesse Compher, Kendall Coyne-Schofield and Britta Curl-Saleme. 

Canada gets one back

Sophie Jaques got Canada back in the game. 

After the Americans had scored five unanswered goals, Jaques scored 13:01 into the second period to cut the U.S. lead to 5-2. This is the first time in the first three Rivalry Games that Canada has had a multi-goal game. The U.S. women won the first two games 4-1 and 6-1. 

USA scores again, chases Canada goalie

And you get a goal! And you get a goal! 

Britta Curl-Salemme scored 11:10 into the second period to give the U.S. women a 5-1 lead over Canada. She’s the fifth different American to score — a bit of a change from the first two games, which both featured hat tricks. Abbey Murphy had three goals in the first game and Hilary Knight matched her in the second. 

Curl-Salemme’s goal resulted in a change in net for the Canadians. Ann-Renee Desbiens, Canada’s longtime starter, was replaced by Emerance Maschmeyer.

Canada power play

Cayla Barnes is in the penalty box for the next two minutes for cross-checking.

Barnes shoved Sarah Fillier in the back 6:55 into the second period. It’s only the second penalty of the night for the U.S. women. 

The USA kills it off. Gwyneth Philips stops Natalie Spooner on a breakaway.

Second period underway

USA leads 4-1 despite being outshot 17-10 in the first period. The Americans are on a power play to start the period, but Canada kills it off.

End of first: USA 4, Canada 1

The Americans aren’t letting up. 

After Canada managed just two goals in the first two games of the Rivalry Series, it looked as if this one might be different when the Canadians scored 48 seconds into the game. With Canadian stalwart Ann-Renee Desbiens returning to goal, the momentum seemed to have shifted in Canada’s favor. 

But the Americans rebounded with a vengeance, scoring four goals over the last 12:11 of the first period. 

Tessa Janecke got the Americans on the board first, scoring just as time on a power play was about to expire 7:49 into the game. Abbey Murphy got her fourth goal of the series, scoring 11:47 into the period. 

And then things got crazy. Jesse Compher got her own rebound and found the net on her second try, making it 3-1 18:18 into the game. Thirty-nine seconds later, Kendall Coyne Schofield made it 4-1. 

That gives the U.S. women 14 goals in the first two-plus games of this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

USA scores two quick goals

The goalfest continues for the U.S. women. 

Jesse Compher scored 18:18 into the first period to give the Americans a 3-1 lead over their archrival. The teams were barely off the faceoff when Kendall Coyne Schofield made it 4-1 on a breakaway.

The Americans have now scored four unanswered goals after Canada took a 1-0 lead 48 seconds into the game. 

Big USA save

Gwyneth Philips stops Canada captain Marie-Philip Poulin on a breakaway.

USA kills off penalty

The USA’s Kirsten Simms was whistled for boarding 13:08 into the first period. Canada gets five shots on goal on the power play but can’t capitalize.

Abbey Murphy gives USA lead

Abbey Murphy is on the board again. 

Murphy, who had a hat trick in the first game of the Rivalry Series, scored 10:47 into the first period on a breakaway to give the U.S. women a 2-1 lead over Canada. Her goal, assisted by Laila Edwards and Alex Carpenter, came just two minutes after Tessa Janecke had scored to even it up.

USA ties it up

The U.S. women took advantage of a power play. 

With four seconds left in Emily Clark’s 2-minute penalty for interference, Tessa Janecke went backdoor to even the game 1-1 at 7:49. Abbey Murphy and Taylor Heise had assists on the goal, which came after a faceoff. 

That’s the fifth assist of the Rivalry Series for Heise. 

USA on power play

The first penalty of the night goes to Canada. Emily Clark was given two minutes for interference with 15:08 to play in the first period.

Canada takes quick lead

Well that didn’t take long. 

Less than a minute into the game and Canada has a 1-0 lead, courtesy of a goal from Sarah Fillier at 48 seconds. Ella Shelton had the puck on the left side and sent a pass toward the goalmouth, where Fillier flicked it past US goaltender Gwyneth Philips. It’s only the third goal for the Canadians in this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

Game underway

USA leads 2-0 in the series.

What time is USA vs Canada Rivalry Series game today?

The USA and Canada will play at 9 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta. The teams will play again in Edmonton at 9 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 13.

What channel is USA vs Canada Rivalry Series game?

The game will be shown on NHL Network.

When is Rivalry Series game? How to watch, TV channel

  • Date: Dec. 10, 2025
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET
  • Location: Rogers Place (Edmonton, Alberta)
  • TV: NHL Network
  • Streaming: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.

Watch US women’s hockey vs. Canada on Fubo

Goaltending matchup

USA’s Gwyneth Philips vs. Canada’s Ann-Renee Desbiens

Team Canada lines

Team USA’s top line remains same

We’re getting a good idea of what US women’s coach John Wroblewski is thinking as far as his lineup. 

Once again, Tessa Janecke, Alex Carpenter and Hilary Knight are the forwards on the No. 1 line while Megan Keller and Laila Edwards are on defense. That line has not changed in the first three games of the Rivalry Series. 

Wroblewski has been experimenting with different forward combinations on the second line, with Taylor Heise the only constant in the first three games. No surprise, she has a goal and four assists after the first two games. 

Team USA lines

Who is playing in the Rivalry Series?

While Canada has kept the core of its 2022 team, the U.S. women will bring a mixture of veterans and new stars to Milano Cortina.

Hilary Knight, arguably the greatest player ever, has said Milano Cortina will be her final Olympics, while Kendall Coyne Schofield is trying to make her fourth Olympic team.

The younger players are equally exciting. Caroline Harvey, who made her Olympic debut in Beijing, has either won best Defenseman Honors or been on the All-Star Team at every world championships since 2022. Taylor Heise (2022) and Laila Edwards (2024), who would be making their Olympic debuts, were both MVPs at the world championships. 

Results of second USA-Canada game

Hilary Knight had a hat trick and Laila Edwards had a goal and two assists in the second Rivalry Series game, which the Americans won 6-1.

Kelly Pannek and Hayley Scamurra also had goals in the second game.

Results of first USA-Canada game

Abbey Murphy had a hat trick and Taylor Heise had a goal and three assists in the first Rivalry Series game, which the Americans won 4-1.

What is the Rivalry Series? 

Now in its sixth season, the Rivalry Series features the U.S. and Canadian women’s national teams. This year’s edition consists of four games, two in the United States and two in Canada. 

The U.S. women won the first two games, played last month in Cleveland and Buffalo, New York, handily.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Department of Justice (DOJ) has charged a Ukrainian woman with helping to carry out dozens of cyberattacks on critical U.S. infrastructure, working with Russian-backed hackers, according to newly unsealed indictments.

The State Department’s Rewards for Justice program is also offering up to $10 million for information leading to others tied to one of the pro-Russia hacking groups she was allegedly affiliated with.

Victoria Eduardovna Dubranova, 33, was arraigned Tuesday on a second federal indictment after being extradited to the U.S. earlier this year.

Dubranova, also known as Vika, Tory and SovaSonya, pleaded not guilty to charges related to her alleged work with two Russian-backed operations, CyberArmyofRussia_Reborn (CARR) and NoName057(16).

Prosecutors say both groups receive backing from Russian government bodies to push Russian geopolitical interests.

According to the DOJ, CARR was founded and funded by Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU, and operated a popular Telegram channel with more than 75,000 followers.

Officials allege the group’s attacks caused real-world harm, including damage to public water systems that spilled hundreds of thousands of gallons of drinking water.

They also cited a November 2024 breach at a Los Angeles meat processing plant that spoiled thousands of pounds of product and released ammonia.

Today’s actions demonstrate the Department’s commitment to disrupting malicious Russian cyber activity — whether conducted directly by state actors or their criminal proxies — aimed at furthering Russia’s geopolitical interests,’ said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg. 

‘We remain steadfast in defending essential services, including food and water systems Americans rely on each day, and holding accountable those who seek to undermine them.’

NoName057(16) is described as a Russia-linked hacktivist group responsible for more than 1,500 attacks between March 2022 and June 2025.

Its targets included government agencies, telecommunications firms, the military, financial institutions and transportation authorities across Ukraine, Estonia, Finland, Lithuania, Norway, Poland and Sweden.

The group also claimed responsibility for cyberattacks on Dutch infrastructure ahead of and during the 2025 NATO Summit in The Hague.

These groups ‘are actively engaging in opportunistic, low-sophistication malicious cyber activity to gain notoriety and create mayhem,’ said Chris Butera, CISA’s acting deputy executive assistant director for cybersecurity.

Dubranova faces up to five years in the NoName case and as many as 27 years in the CARR matter. Trials are set for February and April 2026.

Rewards for Justice announced its $10 million reward with a pointed message aimed at other NoName participants: ‘They call themselves ‘NoName.’ But maybe YOU can name some names,’ it said.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the DOJ for further comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Trump administration is weighing whether to pursue terrorism-related sanctions against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), as officials review allegations the agency has ties to Hamas and consider steps that could further pressure its leadership and operations, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. 

The United Nations agency provides aid, schooling, healthcare, shelter and social services to millions of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria. U.N. officials have described UNRWA as the backbone of Gaza’s aid effort during the two-year war between Israel and Hamas, but the Trump administration has accused the group of ties to Hamas – an allegation the agency vehemently disputes.

Washington, once UNRWA’s biggest donor, froze funding in January 2024 after Israel accused roughly a dozen staff members of involvement in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack that triggered the war.

In October, Secretary of State Marco Rubio referred to UNRWA as a subsidiary of Hamas.

‘UNRWA’s not going to play any role in it,’ Rubio said at the time when asked whether the agency would assist in delivering humanitarian aid to Gaza. ‘The United Nations is here. They’re on the ground. We’re willing to work with them if they can make it work, but not UNRWA. UNRWA became a subsidiary of Hamas.’

Reuters reported it was unclear whether recent internal discussions focused on sanctioning the entire agency or specific officials or operations, and that U.S. officials have not yet settled on what type of sanctions they might pursue.

The sources said the State Department has discussed declaring UNRWA a ‘foreign terrorist organization,’ or FTO – a step that would financially isolate the agency.

Any broad move against UNRWA could disrupt refugee aid across the region, as the agency is already facing a severe funding crisis. Such sanctions would be highly unusual, since the U.S. is both a U.N. member and the host nation of the body that created the agency in 1949.

William Deere, who heads UNRWA’s Washington office, said the group would be ‘disappointed’ if officials were discussing an FTO designation, calling such a step ‘unprecedented and unwarranted.’

He pointed to multiple investigations – including one by the U.S. National Intelligence Council – that concluded UNRWA remains a neutral and essential humanitarian actor.

The White House and State Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. The U.S. and Israel have maintained tough positions towards the agency, particularly in the aftermath of the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre.

President Donald Trump in February reaffirmed that the U.S. would not fund UNRWA. In the executive order, Trump said that ‘UNRWA has reportedly been infiltrated by members of groups long designated by the Secretary of State as foreign terrorist organizations, and UNRWA employees were involved in the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel.’

When the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in April 2025 demanded Israel work with UNRWA, Washington backed Israel, saying it was under no obligation to work with the agency and had ‘ample grounds to question UNRWA’s impartiality.’

UNRWA announced in August 2024 the end of an investigation by the Office of Internal Oversight Services into whether its staff participated in the attacks, as Israel claimed.

The probe examined 19 employees and resulted in nine dismissals over evidence that ‘could indicate’ involvement. The investigation found one case with no evidence of involvement and nine others in which ‘the evidence obtained by OIOS was insufficient’ to prove participation, the agency said.

Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf and Reuters contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

No. 10 Iowa State handed in-state rival No. 12 Iowa its first loss of the season, 74-69, on Wednesday night at the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

Iowa State junior center Audi Crooks had a double-double with 30 points and 10 rebounds. Crooks leads the nation in scoring and helped the Cyclones dominate in the paint, outscoring the Hawkeyes, 40-30.

Iowa State led by as many as 17 points before Iowa came back in the fourth quarter. Hannah Stuelke made a layup with 49 seconds remaining to cut the deficit to 72-69. But Iowa missed four 3-points attempts down the stretch to lose to Iowa State for the first time since 2021 in the CyHawk series.

Iowa State had three players record double-doubles. Besides Crooks, Addy Brown had 20 points and 12 rebounds and Jada Williams had 11 points and 12 assists.

Chit-Chat Williams had 21 points to lead four Hawkeyes in double figures. Iowa struggled to defend Crooks with both Stuelke and Ava Heiden fouling out.

Iowa (9-1) faces Lindenwood on Saturday before traveling to face No. 1 UConn in Champions Classic at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on Dec. 20.

Iowa State (11-0) hosts another in-state rival, Northern Iowa, on Sunday.

USA TODAY SPORTS COACHES POLL: UConn still No. 1, Iowa State into top 10

Here’s everything you need to know about the Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series battle:

Iowa fighting back

The Hawkeyes have gotten as close as three points after leading by as many as 17. Chit-Chat Wright has 18 points to lead three Iowa players in double figures.

End of 3rd quarter: Iowa State 61, Iowa 48

The Cyclones outscored Iowa 26-13 in the stanza. Audi Crooks is showing the nation her scoring skills with 20 points. Teammate Addy Brown is closing in on a double-double with 18 points and nine rebounds. Iowa State had five 3-pointers, after one in the first half.

Iowa State takes biggest lead

The Cyclones, led by 18 points from Audi Crooks, have taken a 48-40 lead.  Jada Williams up to nine assists after finding Audi Crooks again. It’s a 13-5 Iowa State run to start the quarter.

Ava Heiden has her three fouls for Iowa and is on the bench.

Halftime: Iowa 35, Iowa State 35

Iowa was held scoreless for the first six minutes and eight seconds of the second quarter but went on a 9-0 run to even the score at the half. Chit-Chat Wright has 13 points to lead the Hawkeyes.

The game is even in nearly every stat. Iowa is shooting 48% and Iowa State 50%, Iowa has 18 rebounds to Iowa State’s 17 and eight turnovers compared to seven by the Cyclones. Iowa State has the upper hand in points in the paint with 24 compared to 16 by the Hawkeyes.

Two Cyclones in double figures

Audi Crooks has 12 points and Addy Brown 10 each for Iowa State in a fast-paced game.

Iowa has not scored in the second quarter and has seven turnovers in the game.

End of 1st quarter: Iowa 23, Iowa State 19

Kylie Feuerbach hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer to give Iowa a four-point lead. Chit-Chat Wright had the assist on the basket and leads the Hawkeyes with seven points. Iowa was 3-of-7 from behind the arc while the Cyclones were 1-of-5. Addy Brown made the 3.

We are underway at Hilton

What time is Iowa State vs. Iowa?

The Iowa State Cyclones host instate rival Iowa on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 7:00 p.m. ET at the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

Iowa State vs. Iowa women’s basketball: TV, streaming

  • Date: Wednesday, Dec. 10
  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET (4:00 p.m. PT)
  • Location: Hilton Coliseum (Ames, Iowa)
  • TV: ESPN
  • Stream: Fubo, ESPN Unlimited

Iowa starting lineup

Iowa State starting lineup

Iowa arrivals

All-time CyHawk women’s basketball series

The Hawkeyes lead the all-time series 32-23 and have won eight of the last nine matchups, including the last three.

Iowa State women’s basketball roster

Iowa women’s basketball roster

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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The Oklahoma City Thunder are continuing their gradual march to historic greatness.

The Thunder obliterated the Phoenix Suns, 138-89, Wednesday, Dec. 10 in their NBA Cup West Quarterfinal game in Oklahoma City. This marked the largest margin of victory — 49 points — in the NBA thus far in the 2025-26 season.

The Thunder outscored Phoenix by at least 11 points in each quarter, and Oklahoma City’s stars like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren sat the entire fourth quarter, like they have multiple times this season.

Gilgeous-Alexander led all players with 28 points, while Chet Holmgren added 24. Oklahoma City had six different players reach double figures in scoring and also had two others score 9 points. The Thunder shot 52-of-88 (59.1%) from the floor, including an absurd 22-of-40 (55%) from 3-point range.

The Thunder will play the winner of the other West Quarterfinal game Wednesday night, between the San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers. The semifinal is set to take place Saturday, Dec. 13, in Las Vegas.

Suns vs. Thunder highlights

End Q3: Thunder 110, Suns 72

This one is all but over.

The Thunder have continued to dominate the short-handed Suns, who have sputtered on offense without Devin Booker. Frustrations with Phoenix’s performance seem to be getting to the Suns, as Grayson Allen was ejected after shoving Chet Holmgren, who scored 11 points in the period, drawing a flagrant 2 foul.

The Thunder scored 36 points in the third, continuing what has been a pristine offensive night; Oklahoma City also scored 36 in the second quarter and dropped 38 in the first.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander leads the way with an ultra-efficient 28 points on 11-of-15 shooting. The Thunder are shooting 60.3% from the field, including a ridiculous 57.1% from beyond the arc.

Expect Thunder coach Mark Daigneault to rest his star players for most of the fourth quarter, if not the entire period. To that end, none of SGA, Holmgren and Jalen Williams were on the floor to start the fourth.

Grayson Allen ejected

With the margin in the NBA Cup West Quarterfinal between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Phoenix Suns approaching 40 points, tensions flared momentarily.

Midway through the third quarter, Phoenix Suns guard Grayson Allen was on defense near the right wing when he braced himself and threw his weight into Thunder center Chet Holmgren, who was trying to slide past Allen into the right corner. Holmgren crashed into Allen and tumbled to the court, which led to Thunder forward Jalen Williams walking over to Allen and shoving him.

Players from each team then squared up, though officials were quick to defuse the situation and restore calm.

Upon replay review, NBA referee James Williams announced that Allen was being administered a flagrant 2 foul, prompting Allen’s ejection from the game. Williams cited windup and follow-through in assessing the flagrant foul.

Allen recorded 10 points on 3-of-9 shooting and added 4 assists, 1 rebound and 1 steal.

End Q2: Thunder 74, Suns 48

Steady as they are, the Oklahoma City Thunder seemed to have an answer in the second quarter to any Suns offensive.

The Thunder started the second quarter shooting just 2-of-8, which allowed Phoenix to mount a 9-2 run that momentarily closed the margin. But Oklahoma City did not relent and then followed that up with a 9-4 spurt. That OKC run unsurprisingly, was sparked by the defense.

Chet Holmgren swatted away a Dillon Brooks layup that led to a Kenrich Williams pullup jumper that extended the lead to 15. Minutes later, Aaron Wiggins jumped a passing lane to steal a Royce O’Neale pass; on the other end, he flushed a 3 to push the lead to 18.

From then on, it only got worse for the Suns, as the Thunder closed the half on a 17-6 run.

Oklahoma City has three players in double figures in scoring, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander leading the way with 17.

End Q1: Thunder 38, Suns 23

As they have all season long, the Thunder were methodical, deliberate and efficient in the first quarter. They attacked the paint with drives and kickouts.

They shot it extremely well: Oklahoma City laced 60.9% of its shots in the period, compared to Phoenix shooting just 9-of-25 (36%). They also clamped down on defense, generating 3 blocks and 3 steals in the quarter.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was collected and led his team with 9 points on 3-of-5 shooting and added 3 assists.

Grayson Allen led the Suns in scoring with 8 points, including knocking down a pair of 3s.

OKC off to the races

Playing their third game without Devin Booker (groin), the Suns have started the game doing the one thing they cannot afford to do: turn the ball over.

Phoenix has already given it away twice, including a Cason Wallace swipe just seconds into the game. The Thunder, meanwhile, are pushing pace and converting their offense on their terms.

Oklahoma City has opened an early 17-7 lead.

Oklahoma City Thunder starting lineup

  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
  • Cason Wallace
  • Luguentz Dort
  • Jalen Williams
  • Chet Holmgren

Phoenix Suns starting lineup

  • Collin Gillespie
  • Grayson Allen
  • Dillon Brooks
  • Royce O’Neale
  • Mark Williams

Devin Booker out

The Suns will be without their biggest star when they take on the Thunder. Devin Booker remains out with a right groin strain, the team announced.

What time is Suns vs. Thunder NBA Cup game today?

The Oklahoma City Thunder will host the Phoenix Suns on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 7:30 p.m. ET (6:30 p.m. local) at the Paycom Center in Oklahoma City.

Watch NBA Cup games with Amazon Prime Video

How to watch Suns vs. Thunder NBA Cup game: TV, live streaming

The game between the Phoenix Suns and Oklahoma City Thunder will be live streamed nationally on Amazon Prime Video. Thunder fans in Oklahoma can catch the game on FanDuel Sports Network, as well.

  • Date: Dec. 10
  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Location: Paycom Center (Oklahoma City)
  • TV: N/A
  • Streaming: Amazon Prime Video; FanDuel Sports Network (locally in Oklahoma)
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Always heated, the stakes in the latest Rivalry Series are even higher.

The U.S. women’s hockey games against archrival Canada this week are the final chance for coaches to evaluate players before the 2026 Olympic team is named next month. There are 30 players on the Rivalry Series roster, 27 skaters and three goaltenders.

But Olympic rosters have only 23 spots, with three going to goaltenders, so you do the math.

‘I remember in 2022 for the process, I was like, ‘I just want to get there.’ I didn’t take advantage of the team bonding, of the team dinners, of the practices. I didn’t see it as one step at a time. I saw it as one big leap,’ said forward Taylor Heise, one of the last cuts ahead of the Beijing Olympics.

‘Now I’m taking advantage of being here, every time you’re together. It’s such an honor because you never know what it’s going to be a last time,’ Heise added. ‘Many people can say that, but until you have had it taken away from you, it’s really hard to understand.’

The USA won the first two games, 4-1 and 6-1. USA TODAY is providing live updates from today’s Rivalry Series game between the USA and Canada. Follow along:

End of second: USA 6, Canada 4

Anyone who thought Canada was going to go down without a fight hasn’t experienced the Rivalry Series before. 

Canada scored three goals in the second period, including two in a 54-second span, to cut the U.S. lead to 6-4 going into the final period. 

‘The Canada-USA rivalry is insane,’ Abbey Murphy said of the frenzy of goals. 

The Americans dominated their archrivals in the first two games, and this looked like more of the same early. After Sarah Fillier scored 48 seconds into the first period, the Americans scored five unanswered goal. Sophie Jaques finally ended the U.S. run, scoring 13:01 into the second period. Kelly Panek extended the U.S. lead again, to 6-3, before Julia Gosling and Jaques kept the game from getting out of hand. 

Gosling scored a power-play goal 18:43 into the period, and Jaques followed with her second goal of the night 19:47 into the period. 

Despite trailing, Canada has outshot the Americans 30-21. 

Canada scores two quick goals

We’ve got ourselves a game again.

Julia Gosling and Sophie Jaques scored in a 54-second span to cut the U.S. lead to 6-4 as the second period is winding down. Gosling scored first, on a power play 18:43 into the second period. Jaques followed 19:43 into the period. It was her second goal of the game.

Officials took an extended look at Jacques goal after the Americans challenged, arguing that Jaques had made contact with U.S. goalkeeper Gwyneth Philips. But officials decided Jaques was outside the crease when the contact occurred, and a loud cheer went up when the goal was confirmed. The USA goes short-handed because of the lost challenge.

Kelly Panek adds to USA lead

The U.S. women better hope they’re not using up all their goals before the Olympics. 

Kelly Panek is the latest American to get on the score sheet, scoring 16:24 into the second period to give the U.S. a 6-2 lead. She’s the sixth U.S. woman with a goal in Game 3, following Tessa Janecke, Abbey Murphy, Jesse Compher, Kendall Coyne-Schofield and Britta Curl-Saleme. 

Canada gets one back

Sophie Jaques got Canada back in the game. 

After the Americans had scored five unanswered goals, Jaques scored 13:01 into the second period to cut the U.S. lead to 5-2. This is the first time in the first three Rivalry Games that Canada has had a multi-goal game. The U.S. women won the first two games 4-1 and 6-1. 

USA scores again, chases Canada goalie

And you get a goal! And you get a goal! 

Britta Curl-Salemme scored 11:10 into the second period to give the U.S. women a 5-1 lead over Canada. She’s the fifth different American to score — a bit of a change from the first two games, which both featured hat tricks. Abbey Murphy had three goals in the first game and Hilary Knight matched her in the second. 

Curl-Salemme’s goal resulted in a change in net for the Canadians. Ann-Renee Desbiens, Canada’s longtime starter, was replaced by Emerance Maschmeyer.

Canada power play

Cayla Barnes is in the penalty box for the next two minutes for cross-checking.

Barnes shoved Sarah Fillier in the back 6:55 into the second period. It’s only the second penalty of the night for the U.S. women. 

The USA kills it off. Gwyneth Philips stops Natalie Spooner on a breakaway.

Second period underway

USA leads 4-1 despite being outshot 17-10 in the first period. The Americans are on a power play to start the period, but Canada kills it off.

End of first: USA 4, Canada 1

The Americans aren’t letting up. 

After Canada managed just two goals in the first two games of the Rivalry Series, it looked as if this one might be different when the Canadians scored 48 seconds into the game. With Canadian stalwart Ann-Renee Desbiens returning to goal, the momentum seemed to have shifted in Canada’s favor. 

But the Americans rebounded with a vengeance, scoring four goals over the last 12:11 of the first period. 

Tessa Janecke got the Americans on the board first, scoring just as time on a power play was about to expire 7:49 into the game. Abbey Murphy got her fourth goal of the series, scoring 11:47 into the period. 

And then things got crazy. Jesse Compher got her own rebound and found the net on her second try, making it 3-1 18:18 into the game. Thirty-nine seconds later, Kendall Coyne Schofield made it 4-1. 

That gives the U.S. women 14 goals in the first two-plus games of this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

USA scores two quick goals

The goalfest continues for the U.S. women. 

Jesse Compher scored 18:18 into the first period to give the Americans a 3-1 lead over their archrival. The teams were barely off the faceoff when Kendall Coyne Schofield made it 4-1 on a breakaway.

The Americans have now scored four unanswered goals after Canada took a 1-0 lead 48 seconds into the game. 

Big USA save

Gwyneth Philips stops Canada captain Marie-Philip Poulin on a breakaway.

USA kills off penalty

The USA’s Kirsten Simms was whistled for boarding 13:08 into the first period. Canada gets five shots on goal on the power play but can’t capitalize.

Abbey Murphy gives USA lead

Abbey Murphy is on the board again. 

Murphy, who had a hat trick in the first game of the Rivalry Series, scored 10:47 into the first period on a breakaway to give the U.S. women a 2-1 lead over Canada. Her goal, assisted by Laila Edwards and Alex Carpenter, came just two minutes after Tessa Janecke had scored to even it up.

USA ties it up

The U.S. women took advantage of a power play. 

With four seconds left in Emily Clark’s 2-minute penalty for interference, Tessa Janecke went backdoor to even the game 1-1 at 7:49. Abbey Murphy and Taylor Heise had assists on the goal, which came after a faceoff. 

That’s the fifth assist of the Rivalry Series for Heise. 

USA on power play

The first penalty of the night goes to Canada. Emily Clark was given two minutes for interference with 15:08 to play in the first period.

Canada takes quick lead

Well that didn’t take long. 

Less than a minute into the game and Canada has a 1-0 lead, courtesy of a goal from Sarah Fillier at 48 seconds. Ella Shelton had the puck on the left side and sent a pass toward the goalmouth, where Fillier flicked it past US goaltender Gwyneth Philips. It’s only the third goal for the Canadians in this edition of the Rivalry Series. 

Game underway

USA leads 2-0 in the series.

What time is USA vs Canada Rivalry Series game today?

The USA and Canada will play at 9 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta. The teams will play again in Edmonton at 9 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 13.

When is Rivalry Series game? How to watch, TV channel

  • Date: Dec. 10, 2025
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET
  • Location: Rogers Place (Edmonton, Alberta)
  • TV: NHL Network
  • Streaming: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.

Watch US women’s hockey vs. Canada on Fubo

Goaltending matchup

USA’s Gwyneth Philips vs. Canada’s Ann-Renee Desbiens

Team Canada lines

Team USA’s top line remains same

We’re getting a good idea of what US women’s coach John Wroblewski is thinking as far as his lineup. 

Once again, Tessa Janecke, Alex Carpenter and Hilary Knight are the forwards on the No. 1 line while Megan Keller and Laila Edwards are on defense. That line has not changed in the first three games of the Rivalry Series. 

Wroblewski has been experimenting with different forward combinations on the second line, with Taylor Heise the only constant in the first three games. No surprise, she has a goal and four assists after the first two games. 

Team USA lines

Who is playing in the Rivalry Series?

While Canada has kept the core of its 2022 team, the U.S. women will bring a mixture of veterans and new stars to Milano Cortina.

Hilary Knight, arguably the greatest player ever, has said Milano Cortina will be her final Olympics, while Kendall Coyne Schofield is trying to make her fourth Olympic team.

The younger players are equally exciting. Caroline Harvey, who made her Olympic debut in Beijing, has either won best Defenseman Honors or been on the All-Star Team at every world championships since 2022. Taylor Heise (2022) and Laila Edwards (2024), who would be making their Olympic debuts, were both MVPs at the world championships. 

Results of second USA-Canada game

Hilary Knight had a hat trick and Laila Edwards had a goal and two assists in the second Rivalry Series game, which the Americans won 6-1.

Kelly Pannek and Hayley Scamurra also had goals in the second game.

Results of first USA-Canada game

Abbey Murphy had a hat trick and Taylor Heise had a goal and three assists in the first Rivalry Series game, which the Americans won 4-1.

What is the Rivalry Series? 

Now in its sixth season, the Rivalry Series features the U.S. and Canadian women’s national teams. This year’s edition consists of four games, two in the United States and two in Canada. 

The U.S. women won the first two games, played last month in Cleveland and Buffalo, New York, handily.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk women’s basketball game is underway in Ames.

No. 10 Iowa State (10-0) is hosting in-state rival No. 12 Iowa (9-0) at the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

Iowa State junior center Audi Crooks leads the nation in scoring with an average of 27.6 points per game. She has 14 points and four rebounds in the first half for the Cyclones.

USA TODAY SPORTS COACHES POLL: UConn still No. 1, Iowa State into top 10

Here’s everything you need to know about the Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series battle:

Iowa fighting back

The Hawkeyes have gotten as close as three points after leading by as many as 17. Chit-Chat Wright has 18 points to lead three Iowa players in double figures.

Iowa State takes biggest lead

The Cyclones, led by 18 points from Audi Crooks, have taken a 48-40 lead.  Jada Williams up to nine assists after finding Audi Crooks again. It’s a 13-5 Iowa State run to start the quarter.

Ava Heiden has her three fouls for Iowa and is on the bench.

End of 3rd quarter: Iowa State 61, Iowa 48

The Cyclones outscored Iowa 26-13 in the stanza. Audi Crooks is showing the nation her scoring skills with 20 points. Teammate Addy Brown is closing in on a double-double with 18 points and nine rebounds. Iowa State had five 3-pointers, after one in the first half.

Halftime: Iowa 35, Iowa State 35

Iowa was held scoreless for the first six minutes and eight seconds of the second quarter but went on a 9-0 run to even the score at the half. Chit-Chat Wright has 13 points to lead the Hawkeyes.

The game is even in nearly every stat. Iowa is shooting 48% and Iowa State 50%, Iowa has 18 rebounds to Iowa State’s 17 and eight turnovers compared to seven by the Cyclones. Iowa State has the upper hand in points in the paint with 24 compared to 16 by the Hawkeyes.

Two Cyclones in double figures

Audi Crooks has 12 points and Addy Brown 10 each for Iowa State in a fast-paced game.

Iowa has not scored in the second quarter and has seven turnovers in the game.

End of 1st quarter: Iowa 23, Iowa State 19

Kylie Feuerbach hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer to give Iowa a four-point lead. Chit-Chat Wright had the assist on the basket and leads the Hawkeyes with seven points. Iowa was 3-of-7 from behind the arc while the Cyclones were 1-of-5. Addy Brown made the 3.

We are underway at Hilton

What time is Iowa State vs. Iowa?

The Iowa State Cyclones host instate rival Iowa on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 7:00 p.m. ET at the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

Iowa State vs. Iowa women’s basketball: TV, streaming

  • Date: Wednesday, Dec. 10
  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET (4:00 p.m. PT)
  • Location: Hilton Coliseum (Ames, Iowa)
  • TV: ESPN
  • Stream: Fubo, ESPN Unlimited

Iowa starting lineup

Iowa State starting lineup

Iowa arrivals

All-time CyHawk women’s basketball series

The Hawkeyes lead the all-time series 32-23 and have won eight of the last nine matchups, including the last three.

Iowa State women’s basketball roster

Iowa women’s basketball roster

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Luka Doncic is back in a Los Angeles Lakers uniform after the birth of his second child. His presence adds another layer of intrigue when the San Antonio Spurs and Lakers, two Western Conference contenders off to encouraging starts to the 2025-26 season, meet in an NBA Cup quarterfinal game in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Dec. 10.

The Lakers (17-6) began the season without LeBron James, but the continued progression of Austin Reaves alongside Doncic ensured Los Angeles didn’t miss a beat while James was out. That trio combined for 71 points in Doncic’s first appearance since returning from a two-game absence in the Lakers’ 112-108 win over the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday.

San Antonio (16-7) is on pace to be a playoff team for the first time since 2019, even though Victor Wembanyama has missed the past 11 games with a left calf strain. The 7-foot-5 center recently returned to practice but will not make his return in the opening knockout round of the 2025 NBA Cup.

Here’s how to watch Wednesday’s NBA Cup West quarterfinal between the Los Angeles Lakers and San Antonio Spurs:

What time is Spurs vs. Lakers NBA Cup game today?

The Los Angeles Lakers will host the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 10 p.m. ET (7 p.m. local) at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

Watch NBA Cup games with Amazon Prime Video

How to watch Spurs vs. Lakers NBA Cup game: TV, live streaming

The game between the San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers will be live streamed nationally on Amazon Prime Video.

  • Date: Dec. 10
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET
  • Location: Crypto.com Arena (Los Angeles)
  • TV: None
  • Streaming: Amazon Prime Video

Lakers will not use NBA Cup court vs. Spurs

The Los Angeles Lakers will not use the alternate NBA Cup court for their quarterfinal game against the San Antonio Spurs at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Wednesday.

The decision not to use the yellow alternate court was made ‘out of an abundance of caution.’

Lakers star Luka Doncic was among the players who had issues slipping on the court during the team’s 135-118 victory over the L.A. Clippers on Nov. 25. — James H. Williams

This post appeared first on USA TODAY